Saturday, August 27, 2016

7 weird ways the porn industry leads in VR (and what we can learn from it)

Sex was not invented in the sixties and it is likely that our
prehistoric ancestors were pretty turned on to the use of sex-tech, which has
been dated back to at least 26000 years. The dildo predates agriculture, and
there’s enough examples of usable phalluses to state that this was a common object in prehistoric culture. A case has also been made
for the ‘venus’ figures, especially those with exaggerated sexual features, as being
a form of early pornography.

The porn industry has always been quick to grab the opportunities that
innovations in technology offered. In painting, print, photography, film,
videotapes, telephone, television, the web, streaming video, webcams
and now VR. In marketing and commerce, they pioneered progression from free to
paid services, from video to live, pop ups, local offers and personalised
recommendations.

Sex and VRSex, like most forms of human activity, is a 3D affair. It involves
the intimacy and physicality of the 3D human form. Virtual sex gains a lot from ‘presence’ in VR – the actual feeling that you are there
with someone else. It’s one thing to
watch, quite another to feel as though you are actually there, with that
person, or actually having sex with that person. VR is not watching sex it’s
having sex.

It is a natural for VR. Pornography is the creation of fantasy sex. Those fantasies can now be very
real. If you want an idea of the effect of early content on people experiencing
VR sex for the first time, watch this.

1. Content – human presence

VR content is a mainstream category in many porn sites. They
have been experimenting and quick to innovate with VR, long before any consumer VR hardware was
available. One thing they quickly learned was that the full 360 degree was
unnecessary. Interesting things in sex tend to happen in one direction - that's alesson many 360 and VR folk need to learn. As most sex is in one direction, so they limited the fixed field of
view to 180 degrees or less. At this level, you are still the voyeur but the
sense of presence is increased and you have the ability to look around. What
some have reported, who have used Naughty America’s passive porn in VR is a sense of being
there but also an experience, not of small figures on a small screen, but sex on a
human scale. We should listen to this as it is exactly what we need to learn about
the use of VR in learning – presence, the human scale, the idea that we can
simulate human experiences in soft skills (as oposed to hard skills!) and all of those things we regard as
difficult to teach.

2. Interactive – human touch

To really participate, one needs to add the sense of touch. The haptic side is
exactly what has been offered for centuries through sex toys. This has been
supplemented with VR, so that the sex toy is accompanied by imagery of a real
or graphically created partner(s). Even before any commercial VR was available
as a consumer device, there were people working on mechanical masturbation
devices matched against the 3D vision of someone you are having sex with. Tenga
developed a masturbator that synched with a VR image back in 2014. Much of this
took place in Japan, with dolls providing the haptic stimulation. This ‘haptic’
market had been dominated by sex dolls, and by dolls we mean something way
beyond cheap plastic blow-up balloons.

This married Japanese businessman fell in love with his doll (‘she isn’t just after money and never betrays me’). These figures are now being used with VR to add the haptic dimension. The use VR
with AI programmed dolls are also being made, where you choose the personality
and your partner talks back.

A full body sex suit has also been developed that delivers touch all over
your body, with the addition of a sex toy. Synched with VR you get the sensation that someone
else is touching you. It was invented by, you guessed it, the Japanese company
Tenga. It’s actually an April Fools joke but for the full weirdness of this
potential idea, here’s the video.

The haptic dimension has obvious applications in healthcare, where one
has to investigate, apply CPR and so on. It is also applicable in the
manipulation of objects in vocational skills. We get a glimpse here of a
direction of travel as the haptic moves beyond hand controllers to full body sensations nd manipulation of 3D objects in a 3D environment..

3. Interactive live

Live performance, where the performer operates a joystick that controls
a device (sex toy) over the internet has been around since Realtouch in 2009. It can also
be synched to videos and VR experiences to deliver. There are also, wait for
it, mind controlled dildos. You think that is odd, wait for teledildonics.

4. Teledildonics – do it to
each other

Ted Nelson coined this term back in 1975 and it has been around for some time,
with physical, hands free masturbators, for men, women and couples. We used to
call on the telephone, now we Skype and Facetime, next is VR - and for some Teledildonics.

Realtouch was quite a
design piece, with movement, heating and a lubrication reservoir. A couple of
years later Lovense launched iMan and iLady, then Max and Nora, which could
work remotely over Bluetooth. LovePalz then produced Zeus and Hera for couples who
want two way control. The idea was that each device reacts to the other –
faster/slower, tighter/looser.

The new kid on the block is Kiiroo with Onyx and Pearl. Pear and Onyx
are paired devices that allow sex at a distance with your partner. Onyx is for
men with ten rings that can send and receive signals. Pearl is its female
partner device, with a vibration motor and five rings. If you’d like an idea of what sex at a distance is like watch thisVICE video, where a couple try this
for real. The woman masturbates the dildo and he, remotely experiences the
sensation in his vagina device. The guy describes it as half-way between
masturbation and real sex – in other words, it’s getting there.

5. Context and fantasy

There’s even a service in Las Vegas that allows you to experience VR in your hotel room. It provides VR porn in a room built to look like the hotel
room you’re actually in - to add realism. Porn has always been about fantasies and hyperreality has been around for
years in the popular anime porn as well as exaggerated fantasy figures. VR
means that anything is possible in terms of created fantasy worlds. There are
literally no limits to what the imagination can dream up and turn into a sexual
experience. You can literally have sex with anything, anywhere at anytime.
There's already some pretty weird stuff out there – expect more.

6. Group sex – virtual
bachannal

As multiplayer VR develops, group sex is also possible and, guess what,
it’s already here. 3DXChat avatars and in the game they meet, chat, date and have sex. You can be
anyone and operate on a fantasy level with other like-minded fantasists. This is the sort of world that Facebook envisage in social media. They know that the real social world is 3D, as opposed to the current flat world of text and 2D images. Zuckerberg bought Oculus Rift for $2.3 billion - that may be a bargain if he has bought a huge chunk of the future.

7. Sex education & therapy

Many moons ago I produced an interactive version of The Joy of Sex,
complete with Mr & Mrs game, instructional pieces and so on. It was
designed for couples and not porn, although the boundary, as the
original book showed, is not at all clear. There may well emerge some positive applications for VR in sex.

Virtual Sexology, an educational site for sex, is already up and
running.. Actually, what they say is that this is the world’s first fully
interactive lovemaking tool, a safe space for learning how to have great sex
using VR. The site has a sexologist discussing the possibility of both sex
education and therapy. This idea of coaching and instruction over a distance in real acts is interesting.

Future of virtual sex?

We have to be honest here. Sex is a powerful human instinct and its
application in satisfying basic human urges through VR will be huge. One can therefore expect
a huge amount of innovation here in the quest for realism and beyond that,
fantasy, as well as some interesting consequences, in terms of regulation. This
may well be the area that drives VR and exposes the many issues, good and bad,
that VR raises.

VR may challenge the very concept of what sex will be in the future. It
takes technology beyond the simply visual realm into the participatory and on
to levels of realism, even hyperrealism, that have never been possible before.
VR offers not flat images and video for the voyeur but being there, experiencing
sex as if it were real.

Will the virtual world be so alluring and enjoyable that the real world
pales by comparison? Will virtual sex be cathartic, excessive or damaging? What
are the political issues? Will boundaries be transgressed? Will we all experiment
more? How will it be regulated? The technology is always ahead of the sociology, so we need to start
thinking about this now. Porn will lead the way in making us face up to the
realities of virtual reality.

Conclusion

The porn industry has been quick to pick up on embryonic VR technology
and we have much to learn from how they have gone, and are going, about this.
The porn industry has always been a frontier for consumer technology. If it
works there, it will work elsewhere. Look to the effect ‘presence’ can have on
human experiences, supplemented by haptic devices and you literally get a feel
for where this is heading. Beyond this who knows? We can dismiss all of this as
an intrinsic evil or embrace the opportunities, while being careful about the
consequences and effects.

1 Comments:

I remember my first guided visit to CERN few years before the launch of the LHC, at one point the guide showed us the office from where Berners-Lee started the Web, and told us that rumors has it that Berners-Lee was depressed that porn is the leading driver of business on the Web :)Porn will drive VR as much as it drived the development of the Web :P (13% of web search from 2009 to 2010 were porn-related http://www.forbes.com/sites/julieruvolo/2011/09/07/how-much-of-the-internet-is-actually-for-porn/#5e8854ef61f7 )